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Journal of Economics and Economic Education Research Volume 16, Number 1, 2015 EFFECT OF INVENTORY MANAGEMENT EFFICIENCY ON PROFITABILITY: CURRENT EVIDENCE FROM THE U.S. MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY Seungjae Shin, Mississippi State University Kevin L. Ennis, Mississippi State University W. Paul Spurlin, Mississippi State University ABSTRACT While manufacturing firms pursue efficient inventory management, there is limited evidence of improved financial performance related to inventory management practices. This paper examines financial statement data for U.S. manufacturing firms to explore the relationship between inventory management efficiency and firm profitability. The results show that a lower ratio of inventory to sales for a firm is associated with higher profit margin for the firm. In addition, small size firms can receive a larger benefit (as measured by profitability) from increased inventory efficiency when compared to medium and large size firms. Key words: Inventory Management, Profitability, U.S. Manufacturing Industry INTRODUCTION Maintaining an appropriate level of inventory is a key issue to firms’ operational performance. The supposition is that better inventory management is closely related with firms’ better financial performance. Appropriate inventory levels depend on the production schedule as a managerial response to market demand. Inventory is a current asset to a firm, but it is costly to maintain as it waits to be converted into future sales. While excess inventory does increase costs, a shortage of inventory may result in lost sales. Prior research has focused on inventory management methods and optimal inventory sizes as they relate to the balance between more technological information systems, inventory cost savings and production/sales efficiency. Inventory management has evolved into a highly studied and practiced concept in the business world that combines optimizing inventory movement, information-sharing between buyer and seller, lean production strategies, and supply chain management concepts. The core of the current inventory management system is Just-In-Time (JIT) inventory systems. JIT is a philosophy of management that reduces waste and improves quality in all business process (Harrison and Hoek, 2011). JIT has been applied to many Japanese manufacturing firms since the 1970s (Cheng and Podolsky, 1996). JIT originated from the Toyota production system (TPS) and serves to reduce inventory and lead-time while increasing quality of production. JIT is defined as, “an inventory strategy aimed at improving a business’ financial performance by reducing excess inventory and its associated cost” (Sungard, 2007). To implement a JIT inventory system, a sound, long-term relationship with suppliers is critical because suppliers have to fill the inventory as soon as it reaches a minimum level. Therefore, sharing information about the production schedule with part suppliers and delivery companies is 98 Journal of Economics and Economic Education Research Volume 16, Number 1, 2015 essential. This information sharing is now available through a modern IT infrastructure utilizing the Internet and Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP). ERP was introduced in the 1990s as an enterprise information system designed to integrate production and accounting data and functions across organizations. The main goal of ERP is to share data by all functional departments and to access the data immediately to increase prompt decision making (Motiwalla and Thompson, 2009). Together, the Internet and ERP systems dramatically improve the JIT inventory system, allowing real time information tracking and sharing of both production and accounting information. JIT inventory management and the utilization of Internet and ERP systems provides for a “lean production” opportunity. The concept of lean production is to minimize inventory and has been widely used since the 1990s (Eroglu and Hofer, 2011). JIT is the heart of the lean production systems. In the late 1990’s, the JIT and ERP concepts expanded into a concept known as Supply Chain Management (SCM). The supply chain is defined as “management of network of interconnected business,” to satisfy customers’ requests (Harland, 1996). As stated above, the implementation of a technological complete inventory management system to determine an appropriate or optimal inventory level is a critical factor to a firms’ financial performance. Better inventory management such as higher inventory turnovers, reduced days-in-inventory, or lower level of inventory-to-sales ratio is closely related with firms’ better financial performance (Shah & Shin, 2007). Using data collected from the late 1960’s; the late 1990’s; and some early 2000’s, prior studies investigated the relationship between inventory level and firm’s financial performance. A sample of these studies is delineated in our next section of this paper. This prior research offers both numerous and conflicting results as both positive relationships and negative relationships were determined. In addition, inventory management and its impact on financial performance based on firm size was not considered. Because a definitive answer does not exist as to whether optimizing inventory management is related to superior firm financial performance and does the impact differ based on manufacturing firm size, this paper investigates whether successfully managing a low level of inventory will result in higher profitability for the firm. These conflicting relationships and lack of information of the impact on firm size coupled with our utilization of more recent data from U.S. manufacturing firms leads us to a single research hypothesis which states: Hypothesis: A significant relation exists between firm profitability and inventory management efficiency in U.S. manufacturing industry. This study begins with a brief literature review followed by data collection methods, research analysis, and a conclusion. LITERATURE REVIEW The concept of Supply Chain Management and technologically managing inventory has helped a lot of companies to compete more effectively in their business markets. Kannan and Tan (2004) point out the three popular methods used in order to ensure that the product or service is delivered to the customer in the most efficient way possible. These three methods are JIT, Total Quality Management (TQM), and SCM. All three of these methods go hand in hand because they force the company to eliminate waste while increasing the quality of their products and distribution systems. Their research demonstrates that integrated inventory management 99 Journal of Economics and Economic Education Research Volume 16, Number 1, 2015 methods are correlated with firm financial performance. Using return of assets (ROA) as a measure of financial performance, Kannan and Tan (2004) set out to not only reiterate the impact on firm’s operational performance, but also point out that the firm’s business performance can benefit from an inventory management system. Their results concluded that integrating a technological inventory management system results in higher ROA. Shah and Shin (2007) investigate the relationship among IT investment, inventory, and financial performance with industry sector level data of 1960 to 1999. They find that lower inventory levels lead to higher financial performance in manufacturing sector. Their conclusion is that there exists indirect effect on financial performance through inventory management from IT investment. Liberman and Demeester (1999) study Japanese car manufacturers’ JIT production with data of late 1960s to early 1990s. They find that there is a causal relationship between work-in-process inventory and firm’s productivity, i.e., 10% reduction in inventory leads to 1% increase of labor productivity. Thomas (2002) studies inventory changes and future returns with data from 1970 through 1997. He finds that a firm with inventory increase has experiences higher level of profitability, however, this trend changes immediately with a change of inventory decrease. He finds the negative relationship between inventory level and firm’s profitability but he cannot explain the reason. The result from Thomas (2002) conflicts with results from both Liberman and Demeester (1999) and Shah and Shin (2007). Chen, Frank and Wu (2005) investigate inventories of U.S. manufacturing companies in the last two decades of 20th century. They find that firms with high inventory have poor long-term stock returns while firms with slightly lower than average inventory have good stock returns. However, firms with lowest inventory have only normal returns. All four papers study about the relationship with financial performance of U.S. manufacturing industry. But their results are not consistent. The data used in the previous four papers are data of 20th century. Roumiantsev and Netessine (2007) investigated linkage of inventory behavior with financial performance. They found that lower inventory levels are positively associated with return on sales. Capkun et al. (2009) found a significant positive correlation between inventory performance and measures of financial performance in manufacturing companies over 26 year period from 1980 to 2005. Profitability is a concept that a lot of executives and shareholders put emphasis on. This shows them that their company is operating at a level to where more money is coming in than leaving the company. Gill, Biger, and Muthur (2010) discusses the relationship that occurs between the firm’s working capital management and profitability. They define working capital as being involved with current assets and current liabilities while being able to finance these current assets. The main difference between inventory management and working capital management is the fact that working capital management involves managing all of the current assets while inventory management focuses its efforts on inventories alone. Gill et al. (2010) stated that they do not see any relationship between days of accounts payable and profitability or even with days in inventory and profitability. They note that past studies have given results that differ from their own. Given conflicting results in previous studies, we are motivated to offer evidence as to whether inventory management and profitability are related. DATA Using the Compustat database, the authors obtain annual balance sheet and income statement data for US manufacturing firms. Manufacturing firms are identified in the database by using the NAICS (North America Industry Classification System) code. Manufacturing 100 Journal of Economics and Economic Education Research Volume 16, Number 1, 2015 companies have a NAICS code beginning with 31, 32, and 33. The authors conduct tests on two sets of data: The first data set is made of three years of data from 2005 and 2007, and the second expands the time window to eight years, from 2005 to 2012. Table 1 presents the two data sets. Table 1 Data Sets Data Set I Data Set II Periods 2005 ~ 2007 (3 years) 2005 ~ 2012 (8 years) Number of Firms 1,289 959 Number of Observation 3,867 7,672 The total number of manufacturing companies, which are listed in the U.S. stock markets in 2005 is 1,292. Among them, 1,289 U.S. manufacturing firms are listed for three years from 2005 and 959 firms are listed for eight years. The number of firms decreases in our sample when the sample period is increased to eight years because we use a balanced panel and annual observations for sample firms that are available for all years in the first sample are not available for all firms in the second sample. Data set I ends with fiscal year 2007 in an attempt to avoid our data being influenced by the financial crisis beginning in 2008. During the financial crisis 2008 through 2009, many companies were delisted (Erkens, Hung, and Matos, 2012). To form a balanced panel of data, we require observations for sample firms to occur in all three or eight years and to include all financial statement items so that our final sample includes a total of 1,289 / 959 firms times 3 years / 8 years. Profit margin (PM), calculated as the ratio of net income to total revenue, is used as our measurement of a company’s profitability, and inventory- sales-ratio (ISR), calculated as total inventory divided by total revenue, is used to measure inventory management efficiency with a lower ISR being interpreted as a higher level of inventory management efficiency. ANALYSIS I This study uses cross-sectional, time-series panel data. Cross-sectional variables are ISR and PM collected for 1,289 U.S. manufacturing companies. The time series for these variables is collected for three consecutive years. The total number of observations is 3,867. We classified these data into three groups based on size of year-firm revenue (table 2): (1) Small size companies with less than or equal to $100 million dollars per year, (2) medium size company with an annual revenue between $100 million dollars and $1 billion dollars, and (3) large size company with greater than or equal to $1 billion dollars per year. Using this convention, a firm may appear as a different size from one year to the next in our sample. The authors assumed that company’s inventory management efficiency depends on the size of the company. The average ISR for the large companies is 0.1265 and those for the medium and small companies are 0.154 and 0.229 respectively. Table 2 Classification of Company Size and average ISR Size Criteria Number of Observations Average ISR Small ≤ $ 100 M 1030 0.228890 Medium Between $100 M and $ 1 B 1554 0.154085 Large ≥ $1B 1283 0.126500 101
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